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View Poll Results: What size does it feel like
Second largest 100 68.03%
Third largerst 33 22.45%
Fourth largest 14 9.52%
Voters: 147. You may not vote on this poll

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Unread 12-04-2011, 07:34 PM
 
1,496 posts, read 685,692 times
Reputation: 757
Quote:
Originally Posted by nowincal11 View Post
LA is not a suburban city... ...When you are in downtown Chicago, you feel like you are in a major city, yet the far NW side is way more suburban than anything you would see in LA.
I wish I understood LA better, seeing as how I spent most of my life in the Southwest. Alas, it remains a mystery. It definitely feels like a huge beast, but such a different kind of beast than New York, Philly, Chicago, etc.
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Unread 12-04-2011, 08:35 PM
 
Location: Not where you ever lived
9,257 posts, read 9,460,905 times
Reputation: 4296
j_cat: My son-in-law was a Hollywood set designer. LA, I think, is a city that never seems to sleep, I never met anyone who lives there that can adequately describe it, but they all have stories to tell. I think the people who live there learn to accept its quirkiness and carves out their own niche. The guy who lives and works in Beverly Hills will have a different opinion of LA than the guy who lives in Malibu or Venice. I think it is a bit like trying to describe Chicago's neighborhoods in one sentence. LA is what it is.

Last edited by linicx; 12-04-2011 at 09:06 PM..
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Unread 12-05-2011, 12:31 AM
 
116 posts, read 93,258 times
Reputation: 38
It feels big. Include near areas such as Milwaukee and Madison and the whole area feels quite big and populated. While Madison and Milwaukee are not theoretically part of Chicago metro area, there is so much going there in traffic between all three cities, that culturally and regionally u feel no difference.
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Unread 12-05-2011, 12:37 AM
 
Location: homeless
828 posts, read 356,076 times
Reputation: 760
Chicago is a massive city. It "feels" bigger than LA or NYC. Can't really find the right words to describe the difference though. It's just a Bear of a city. Haha. HAHAHAHAH.
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Unread 12-05-2011, 06:13 AM
 
Location: Chicago
31,933 posts, read 41,729,371 times
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It's hard to conceive of any way in which Chicago feels bigger than NYC or even remotely close to it.
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Unread 12-05-2011, 07:13 AM
Status: "celebrating" (set 5 days ago)
 
Location: River North, Chicago, Illinois
2,278 posts, read 1,536,186 times
Reputation: 1862
Quote:
Originally Posted by nowincal11 View Post
...
yet the far NW side is way more suburban than anything you would see in LA.
LA is bigger than Chicago, and maybe because of that there are definitely parts of LA that look as suburban as anything inside Chicago city limits.
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Unread 12-05-2011, 08:58 AM
 
3,954 posts, read 3,405,482 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sealtite View Post
Chicago is a massive city. It "feels" bigger than LA or NYC. Can't really find the right words to describe the difference though. It's just a Bear of a city. Haha. HAHAHAHAH.
You're joking right??

I mean I at least understand the debate of Chicago versus LA, because of Downtown Chicago and dense surrounding neighborhoods, but NYC??

How in the world could anyone actually say that Chicago "feels" bigger than New York???

I mean the only way I think could possibly is that maybe because the burroughs are separated by water and the outer burroughs have a bit more of their own identity, as well as adjacent New Jersey and Long Island, but I still can't possibly see how that could translate to Chicago feeling bigger.

Anyone with two eyes can see that the New York area is the most massive urban areas in the world.
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Unread 12-06-2011, 09:35 PM
 
5 posts, read 1,363 times
Reputation: 10
why bother to post to this list if u have nothing to say, get off!
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Unread 12-06-2011, 10:43 PM
 
Location: Chicago
382 posts, read 224,938 times
Reputation: 324
Quote:
Originally Posted by nowincal11 View Post
LA is a massive concrete jungle that has relatively uniform density throughout the whole city. When you are in downtown Chicago, you feel like you are in a major city, yet the far NW side is way more suburban than anything you would see in LA.
Assuming you are referring to the NW side of the city of Chicago and not the far northwest suburbs I don't understand what you are getting at. So you think the wealthy areas of LA in the Hollywood Hills or Bel Air with it's winding streets and big mansions are less suburban than bungalows on a grid on the NW or SW sides of Chicago?
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Unread 12-07-2011, 05:28 PM
 
Location: Not where you ever lived
9,257 posts, read 9,460,905 times
Reputation: 4296
The residential area I saw in LA - which I liked very much --(architecturally) reminded me more of the brick bungalows with small lots in Berwyn than it did the houses in Algonquin. Overall it looked like an aging well-kept Chicago neighborhood. This was not a new neighborhood. The houses were probably built in 30s & 40's.
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